Abstract

Surface sensitive synchrotron x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and real-time in situ XPS were used to study the thermal stability of the hydroxyl termination and downward band bending on the polar surfaces of ZnO single crystals. On the O-polar face, the position of the Fermi level could be reversibly cycled between the conduction band and the band gap over an energetic distance of approximately 0.8 eV (\ensuremath{\sim}1/4 of the band gap) by controlling the surface H coverage using simple ultrahigh vacuum (UHV) heat treatments up to 750 \ifmmode^\circ\else\textdegree\fi{}C, dosing with HO/H and atmospheric exposure. A metallic to semiconductorlike transition in the electronic nature of the O-polar face was observed at an H coverage of approximately 0.9 monolayers. For H coverage less than this, semiconducting (depleted) O-polar surfaces were created that were reasonably stable in UHV conditions. In contrast, the downward band bending on the Zn-polar face was significantly more resilient, and depleted surfaces could not be prepared by heat treatment alone.

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